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Every year, Gulf of Mexico storms remind New Orleans homeowners what is at stake. Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, and the time to prepare your roof is before the first tropical system forms — not after. Big Easy Roofing has helped homeowners across Orleans Parish, Jefferson Parish, and Metairie get their roofs storm-ready for years, and the pattern is always the same: the ones who prep early spend less and stress less.
If you wait until a named storm enters the Gulf, every roofing contractor in the metro area is already booked. Here is what to do now so your roof can handle whatever this hurricane season throws at it.

The single best thing you can do before hurricane season is get a professional up on your roof. A trained inspector will find things you cannot see from the ground — cracked flashing, lifted shingles, deteriorating sealant around vents and pipes, and soft spots in the decking that signal moisture damage underneath.
In New Orleans, roofs take a beating year-round from humidity, UV exposure, and afternoon thunderstorms. By April or May, damage from the previous year has had months to worsen. An inspection catches those issues while there is still time to fix them. Schedule a pre-hurricane inspection as early as possible — April is ideal.
Inspections only matter if you act on the findings. The most common pre-hurricane repairs in the New Orleans area include:
None of these are major projects individually. But left alone through a Category 2 or 3 storm, any one of them can lead to thousands in water damage. Get storm-prep repairs done while contractors still have open schedules.
Hurricane straps (also called hurricane clips or tie-downs) are metal connectors that anchor the roof framing to the wall structure below. Without them, high winds can lift the entire roof off the walls — and that is exactly what happens in a lot of older New Orleans homes.
Louisiana building code now requires hurricane straps on new construction, but plenty of homes in Lakeview, Gentilly, Mid-City, and the Westbank were built before those requirements existed. Retrofitting straps is not cheap, but it is one of the most effective structural upgrades you can make. After Hurricane Ida tore through Southeast Louisiana in 2021, homes with properly installed straps fared significantly better than those without.
New Orleans is full of mature trees — water oaks, live oaks, magnolias, and crepe myrtles line nearly every block in Uptown, the Garden District, and Old Metairie. Beautiful in calm weather. Dangerous in a hurricane.
Any branch within 10 feet of your roof is a potential projectile. Water oaks in particular are notorious for dropping large limbs even in moderate winds. Before June 1:
Hiring an arborist now is much easier (and cheaper) than dealing with a tree through your roof in August.
Clogged gutters do not cause roof damage on a sunny day, but during a hurricane they cause serious problems. When gutters are packed with leaves and debris, water backs up under the roof edge, gets behind fascia boards, and soaks into the soffit and decking. Over a multi-hour storm with heavy rain bands, that is a lot of water going where it should not.
Clean your gutters, check that downspouts are directing water away from the foundation, and make sure gutter hangers are tight. If sections are pulling away from the fascia, reattach or replace them.
There is a point where patching an aging roof before hurricane season is just delaying the inevitable. Asphalt shingle roofs in the New Orleans climate typically last 15-20 years. If yours is pushing past that, or if the last inspection found widespread granule loss, multiple soft spots, or persistent leaks that keep coming back, a full replacement before hurricane season is the smarter move.
A new roof installed to current Louisiana building code standards — with proper hurricane straps, wind-rated underlayment, and correctly fastened shingles — performs dramatically better in a storm than a 20-year-old roof held together with patches. Plan a roof replacement before June if your roof is at the end of its life.
Here is a rough breakdown of what homeowners in the New Orleans metro typically spend on pre-season prep:
| Service | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Professional roof inspection | $200 – $300 |
| Minor repairs (flashing, loose shingles) | $200 – $800 |
| Gutter cleaning and repair | $150 – $400 |
| Tree trimming near roof | $300 – $1,500 |
| Hurricane strap retrofit | $1,500 – $3,000 |
Compare that to the average post-hurricane roof claim, which easily runs $10,000-$25,000+. Proactive prep is the better investment every time.
The National Weather Service New Orleans/Baton Rouge office tracks all tropical activity in the Gulf of Mexico — bookmark it and check it regularly once June 1 hits.
Before June 1. Schedule inspections in April or May so there is time to complete any repairs before the season starts. Once a storm forms in the Gulf, roofing contractors get booked solid within days.
Wind lifts shingles, tears flashing, and sends debris into roofing materials. Wind-driven rain penetrates any gap, and even small openings can lead to major interior water damage during a sustained storm.
Yes. Metal hurricane straps anchor the roof to the walls and are required on new construction in Louisiana. Retrofitting older homes with straps is one of the most effective upgrades for storm survivability.
Yes. Branches within 10 feet of the roof become projectiles in high winds. Water oaks, which are common across New Orleans neighborhoods, are especially prone to dropping large limbs.
A pre-season inspection runs $200-$300. Minor repairs (flashing, loose shingles) cost $200-$800. Proactive prep costs far less than post-storm emergency work, which routinely exceeds $10,000.
Ready to get your roof storm-ready? Contact Big Easy Roofing to schedule your pre-hurricane assessment.
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